Cart 0
Join in and let's jam Human Trafficking together

“EYES 4 U” National Anti-Trafficking Co-Op

Traffick Jam Live (TJL) is helping, along with other leading anti-trafficking organizations, to produce bold, new strategies to disrupt and dismantle the lucrative and illegal business of child sex trafficking in the U.S. The “Eyes 4 U” campaign is empowered by a collaborative co-op of leading U.S. anti-trafficking organizations and law enforcement. The key is getting vital anti-trafficking information directly to local communities and vulnerable girls and boys, right where they are. Traffick Jam Live produces annual headliner concerts that are broadcasted to large national audiences, instructing local communities how to spot then inform local law enforcement of potential trafficking situations and encourage local school systems to activate anti-trafficking curriculum. Saving lives and rescuing children from trafficking.

The “EYES 4 U” national co-op jointly develops and implements critical & strategic social media campaigns that leverage Traffick Jam Live’s concert productions to inform & train local communities how to make a difference. “Trained eyes” will learn how to take action and call local law enforcement if the situation is “active” & the National Human Trafficking Hotline at 1-888-373-7888 or text 233733 & the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children 1-800-843-5678. Join in and let’s JAM trafficking together.

Benefits of the “EYES 4 U” national co-op members include: collaborative, creative, content development; branded ads and fundraising revenue streams via the concert broadcasts; board & steering committee roles; customized video & social media productions; annual conference; presence at major sporting events; sharing of best practices and tailored features to help the unique needs of participating co-op members.

EYES 4 U” educating communities how to disrupt the trafficking of children in the U.S.

Sample “Eyes 4 U” Hand Signal - PSA - Social Media Post

Myths and Facts about Human Trafficking in the U.S.

  • Fact: Even though the Bureau of Justice Statistics reports that arrests have been down in recent years, from 2015-2020, states independently reported 2,169 arrests to the FBI’s Uniform Crime Reporting Program for Human Trafficking in relation to involuntary servitude (i) and commercial sex crimes (ii). 32 states reported a minimum of 1 human trafficking crime in 2019.

  • Fact: In the Polaris Project’s report “Sex Trafficking in the U.S. : A Closer Look at U.S. Citizen Victims”, they state that nearly 6,000 sex trafficking cases involved American citizens when they published their paper in 2015.

  • Fact: Human trafficking is defined as “the unlawful act of transporting or coercing people in order to benefit from their work or service, typically in the form of forced labor or sexual exploitation” (Oxford Languages). Human smuggling is strictly the movement of people across borders, though smuggling can become exploitative and therefore would be classified as human trafficking.

  • Fact: Victims may not be willing to seek help as they could be concerned for their own wellbeing or for that of others due to threats of violence from their trafficker(s).

Screen Shot 2021-02-17 at 11.08.27 AM.png